"They will persuade you, Alfonso. At last you will agree to marry her."
The Andalusian _caballero_ looked at her with an angry face, and exclaimed with energy:--
"They might tear me in pieces before such a thing happened!"
"You cannot be perfectly sure of it," said she, looking at him with the same anxiety; "they will continue working at you, working at you; they will get you so entangled that finally there will be no way out of it but to yield."
"No, I swear to you, no! Come, don"t speak any more of this, Julita, for this sort of talk annoys me very much."
For a moment the young girl"s eyes sparkled joyfully. Then the same expression of unhappiness came back into them.
Five or six days pa.s.sed. Don Alfonso redoubled his manifestations of affection. Nevertheless, such oppressive unhappiness weighed upon the lovers that they were obliged to remain long moments in silence, with their heads down and their eyes fixed on vacancy. Julita often shed tears, and Saavedra, also overwhelmed with sorrow put forth useless efforts to console her. The truth was they saw no way out of their difficulties. The horizon was absolutely shut in and dark.
"I haven"t any profession whatever," said the _caballero_. "If we were to marry, we should starve to death.... That is the result of having educated me for a rich man!"
"As for starving to death, I don"t believe it," said Julita, her face deeply flushing. "Mamma and I are not rich, but we can live decently....
It is clear that for you who are accustomed to another sort of life, it would be very hard ... but ..."
"Oh, don"t speak of that, Julia!" exclaimed the _caballero_, with the gesture of a man whose dignity was wounded.... "It is lowering me too much to believe that I could consent for you to support me.... But even if I were so low as that, still I could not do it, because I do not want to be my mother"s murderer."
The girl said no more, and, as often before, the tears began to slide down her cheeks.
"Does your mother have any suspicion of what is going on?"
"No."
"Then be very careful. You know as well as I do how peculiar she is; if she had a suspicion that my mamma objected, she would spoil the whole business, and I should never consent to set my foot in this house again."
One evening, after quite a number of days had pa.s.sed, the _caballero_ came with his face brighter than it had been for some time. Instead of sitting down near the piano, the lovers went and stood in the bay-window. After painting things in very black colors as usual and lamenting a long time, Don Alfonso said to his cousin:--
"As I have been thinking of nothing else than this all day and all night, certain means of escaping from this difficulty have occurred to me. I have not told them to you, for they are very absurd. Still, as last night I was walking up and down my room without being able to sleep, one scheme came into my head, and this one is very sure but very bold ... so much so that I am afraid to tell it to you."
"Is it so bad as all that?"
"Bad, no; but bold. It requires you to disregard certain social conventions and to show a great will power."
"Come, then, tell me. I am very curious to hear about it."
"Very well then, Julia; mamma, though you imagine her to be a hard woman, because of your childish recollections and because in reality she has a cold and serious exterior which prejudices against her, has a heart that is in reality very warm. She has given me unequivocal proofs of it, oftentimes forgiving me almost too quickly for very serious faults. Her character is as haughty as your mamma"s; but these natures are easy to overcome; to make them yield it needs only that you humiliate yourself.... This is what I was thinking of last night:--If Julia had the courage to make a decided stroke and elope with me to Seville and present ourselves before her, I am certain that she would not hesitate to forgive us and grant us her blessing. No woman, however bad she is, would consent to let the daughter of her own cousin be dishonored."
"This scheme is madness. I cannot believe that you would propose to me such an atrocious thing!"
"I do not propose it. All I do is to report to you a thought which occurred to me. If I cannot tell you what my heart feels and what pa.s.ses through my mind, whom shall I tell it to, Julia _mia_?"
"This is the last thing that you ought to have conceived!"
"I have thought so much that it is not strange if it were the last thing that I did conceive. The project would be very audacious, violent, and repugnant to you, but not a piece of folly as you say; it is a certain, infallible means of attaining what we desire."
"Well, then, even if it is certain and infallible, I will not hear to it, do you understand?"
Don Alfonso did not give up conquered. He continued to argue the point, not losing his calmness, adducing reasons, mentioning various examples which he had already prepared, and in a thousand skilful ways overcoming Julia"s scruples. But even when the girl found herself cornered, captured in the net of her lover"s sophistries, she suddenly grew angry and exclaimed, "Well, even if it be as you say, still I don"t like it, I don"t like it, and that is sufficient!"
Julia, though endowed with a rash and impetuous nature, had an undisturbed conscience; she was a good girl and that was the very reason why this scheme deeply wounded her sense of propriety. Nevertheless, Saavedra kept constantly tormenting her with the hope of shaking her.
The afternoon was now declining; the boudoir began to fill with shadows.
Don Alfonso had at last exhausted all the powers at his command, and was still far from attaining his end.
"Very well," said he after a long silence, doing his best to hide his scorn and giving his words a peculiarly melancholy intonation, "I have eagerly tried to find some way of escaping from the painful situation in which we are. I propose to you the only practicable and certain method.
You yourself have seen that it was so and you have comprehended the necessity of adopting some energetic plan. And yet you refuse to accept it. I respect the scruples which you entertain in regard to it, but you will permit me to tell you that the woman who really and truly loves will rise above them. If the love that you had for me were as great as you say...."
"Alfonso!"
"I know well that you love me--don"t go to protesting.... But the fact is, that though we love each other very much, we are very unhappy and we find no way of escaping from it. What is left for us to do? Nothing but to part and never see each other again."
"O Alfonso!"
"Yes, Julia, yes; it must be: we must separate, and forever. Here all that we do is to torment ourselves cruelly. It is an infernal life to have happiness before our eyes and not be able to touch it. Before proposing this last recourse,--which is very harsh to be sure,--but absolutely indispensable,--I firmly decided to leave the country, in case you did not accept it. So to-morrow I take the train for Paris. I confess frankly I have not the strength to endure this tormenting situation."
The astute _caballero_ ceased speaking. Julia likewise was silent: a melancholy pallor spread over her lovely face; her eyes were fixed wildly on a point of s.p.a.ce, and she sat motionless as a statue. Don Alfonso left her in this situation a long time without disturbing her eager and anxious thoughts, though he kept looking at her. Her pallor kept growing more and more p.r.o.nounced.
When he felt that the right moment had arrived, the wily seducer went to take his hat which he had laid on the piano, and returning to the girl, and holding out his hand, he said in a trembling voice:--
"_Adios_, Julia!"
She retained it a moment, and then, giving him a desperate look, her face being now livid, said:--
"Don"t go, Alfonso. Do with me what you please. I am ready to follow you."
The _caballero_, after a.s.suring himself that his aunt could not see them, long held her tightly enfolded in his arms.
XXV.
"Boy, bring me a gla.s.s of _limon_.... Bring me two, do you hear?"
The banker was choking. He was a short, stout man, with extremely red cheeks. He unb.u.t.toned his shirt collar and went on shuffling the cards, all the time snorting furiously, as though he were threatened by some apoplectic attack.
"Game."
The players made their play, laying their stakes beside the cards. A gloved hand placed a package of bills on one of them.
"How much of that do you bet, Saavedra?" asked the fat gambler, lifting his eyes which were full of terror and seemed to ask for mercy.
"All," replied the Andalusian _caballero_ dryly.